Surgery Overview
Vitrectomy is the surgical removal of the
vitreous gel from the middle of the eye. It may be
done when there is a
retinal detachment, since removing the vitreous gel
gives your eye doctor (ophthalmologist) better access to the
back of the eye. The vitreous gel may also be removed if blood in the vitreous
gel (vitreous hemorrhage) does not clear on its own.
During a vitrectomy, the surgeon inserts small instruments into the
eye, cuts the vitreous gel, and suctions it out. After removing the vitreous
gel, the surgeon may treat the retina with a laser (photocoagulation), cut or
remove fibrous or scar tissue from the retina, flatten areas where the retina
has become detached, or repair tears or holes in the retina or
macula.
At the end of the surgery, silicone oil or a gas (perfluropropane)
is injected into the eye to replace the vitreous gel and restore normal
pressure in the eye.
Vitrectomy is always done by an eye doctor who has special training
in treating problems of the retina.
What To Expect After Surgery
Vitrectomy may require an overnight hospital stay, but it may
sometimes be done as outpatient surgery. The surgery lasts 2 to 3 hours. Your
eye doctor will determine if the surgery can be done with
local or general anesthesia.
Why It Is Done
Vitrectomy may be done to:
- Repair or prevent
traction retinal detachment, especially when it
threatens to affect the macula.
- Repair very large tears in the
retina.
- Reduce vision loss caused by bleeding in the vitreous gel
(vitreous hemorrhage) when bleeding is severe or when the blood does not clear
on its own after several months.
- Treat severe
proliferative retinopathy that causes severe scar
tissue formation or when growth of new blood vessels on the retina
(neovascularization) continues despite repeated laser treatment.
How Well It Works
Vitrectomy has been shown to greatly improve visual acuity in many
people who have severe vitreous hemorrhage that has not cleared on its own. A
vitrectomy can decrease the risk of severe bleeding in people who have begun to
have bleeding into the vitreous gel. It can also reduce the risk of severe
bleeding in people with growth of abnormal blood vessels in the
iris.
In general, surgery can restore some vision lost as a result of
traction retinal detachment and may help prevent further detachment. But the
results tend to be better when the detachment has not affected the center of
the retina (macula) and the
central vision it provides.
Risks
Vitrectomy may cause elevated pressure inside the eye (intraocular
pressure, or IOP), especially in people who have
glaucoma.
There are several other serious, vision-threatening risks
associated with vitrectomy. These include:
- Further bleeding into the vitreous
gel.
- Retinal detachment.
- Fluid buildup in the clear
covering of the eye (corneal edema).
- Growth of new blood vessels on
the surface of the iris (rubeosis iridis), which can eventually cause a form of
severe glaucoma (neovascular glaucoma). This can lead to permanent eye
pain or loss of the eye.
- Infection inside the eye
(endophthalmitis).
What To Think About
One of the main uses of vitrectomy is to remove blood from the
middle of the eye, a condition called vitreous hemorrhage. When vitreous
hemorrhage occurs, some doctors may recommend waiting several months to a year
to see whether the vitreous gel will clear on its own before they perform a
surgery that can have serious complications.
But if the hemorrhage is causing severe vision loss or is
preventing treatment of severe retinopathy, surgery may be performed sooner
rather than later. Some studies have shown that long-term results are better
with early vitrectomy.
For more information, see the topic
Retinal Detachment.
Complete the surgery information form (PDF)
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